* If you've edited one or more files, expand the view of this project to the directory in which these files are located and right click on the directory. This gives you a menu item <menuchoice>Subversion</menuchoice> that offers you different choices. Choose <menuchoice>Compare to base</menuchoice> to see the differences between the version you have edited and the version in the repository you had previously checked out (the revision "base"). The resulting view will show the "diffs" for all files in this directory.

* If you only edited a single file, you can also get the <menuchoice>Subversion</menuchoice> menu for this file by simply right clicking on the corresponding file name in the project view. Even simpler, just right clicking into the '''Editor''' view in which you have opened this file will also give you this menu option.

* If you only edited a single file, you can also get the <menuchoice>Subversion</menuchoice> menu for this file by simply right clicking on the corresponding file name in the project view. Even simpler, just right clicking into the '''Editor''' view in which you have opened this file will also give you this menu option.

If you only edited a single file, you can also get the Subversion menu for this file by simply right clicking on the corresponding file name in the project view. Even simpler, just right clicking into the Editor view in which you have opened this file will also give you this menu option.

If you want to check in one or more edited files, right click either on an individual file, subdirectory, or whole project and select Subversion -> Commit. This will get you into Review mode, the third mode besides Code and Debug as you can see in the top right corner of the KDevelop main window. The picture on the right shows you how this looks. In Review mode, the top part shows you diffs for the entire subdirectory/project and each individual changed file with changes highlighted (see the various tabs on this part of the window). By default, all changed files are in the changeset you are about to commit, but you can unselect some of the files if their modifications are unrelated to what you want to commit. For example, in the example on the right I have unselected step-32.cc and step-32.prm because the changes in these files have nothing to do with the other ones I made to this project and I don't yet want to check them in yet (I may later want to do so in a separate commit). After reviewing the changes you can enter a commit message into the text box and hit Commit on the right to send things off.

As with seeing differences, if you want to check in a single file you can also just right click into the editor window to get the Subversion -> Commit menu item.